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by teawrecks
1597 days ago
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More specifically, it is believed by historians/biologists that humans didn't evolve the ability to distinguish between shades of blue until relatively recently. The ocean and the sky are 2 of the only examples, and humans didn't spend much time in either place. A few fruits are blue, a few poisonous animals might have some blue, but the vast majority of natural things aren't blue. We have examples of ancient writings comparing the color of the ocean to the color of wine. Even now, our eyes have the fewest cones for detecting blue wavelengths, and the most for distinguishing greens. Graphical artists have to account for this literally all the time. Every digital color space we've made saves some bits by shifting more color resolution to greens and reds because no one will notice the extra blues. |
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All language known have terms for black and white.
If a language has three color terms, the third is 'red'.
If a language has four color terms, the fourth is either 'green' or 'yellow'.
If a language has five color terms, the fifth is the other of 'green' or 'yellow'.
If a language has six terms, the sixth is 'blue'.
If a language has seven terms, the seventh is 'brown'.
And from there it starts to heavily diverge with purple, pink, orange, grey.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_relativity_and_the_...